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IN RE: NATIONAL COLLEGIATE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION ATHLETIC GRANT-IN-AID CAP ANTITRUST LITIGATION
Case Number:
4:14-md-02541
Court:
Nature of Suit:
Multi Party Litigation:
Class Action, Multi-district Litigation
Judge:
Firms
- Akerman LLP
- Allen Matkins
- ArentFox Schiff
- Berg & Androphy
- Bradley Devitt
- Bryan Cave
- Bullivant Houser
- Bursor & Fisher
- Clarick Gueron
- Covington & Burling
- Cravath Swaine
- Derek G. Howard Law Firm
- DLA Piper
- Dorsey & Whitney
- Dugan Law Firm
- Fox Rothschild
- Gustafson Gluek
- Hagens Berman
- Hausfeld LLP
- Hellmuth & Johnson
- Hogan Lovells
- Holland & Knight
- Jenner & Block
- Jones Walker
- King & Spalding
- Kirkland & Ellis
- Law Offices of Jon T. King
- Lewis & Llewellyn
- Lieff Cabraser
- Lockridge Grindal
- Marino Tortorella
- Mayer Brown
- Minami Tamaki
- Pearson Warshaw
- Pillsbury Winthrop
- Polsinelli PC
- Pritzker Levine
- Proskauer Rose
- Riley Safer
- Robins Kaplan
- Robinson Bradshaw
- Skadden Arps
- Stinson LLP
- Tompkins McGuire
- Walter Haverfield
- Weil Gotshal
- Wilkinson Stekloff
- Winston & Strawn
- Wolf Haldenstein
- Zelle LLP
- Zimmerman Reed
Companies
- ABC Inc.
- American Athletic Conference
- Atlantic Coast Conference
- CBS Corp.
- ESPN Inc.
- Fox Corp.
- National Collegiate Athletic Association
- NBCUniversal Media LLC
- Turner Broadcasting System Inc.
- University of Iowa
Sectors & Industries:
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The National Collegiate Athletic Association has slammed the closing arguments of student-athletes in a fight over compensation, telling a California federal judge the players relied on expert witnesses to "smuggle in" evidence that's not admissible.
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November 20, 2018
NCAA Falls 'Far Short' In Antitrust Trial Closings, Athletes Say
NCAA athletes on Tuesday fired back at the association's closing arguments in a landmark antitrust federal bench trial in California over NCAA rules that limit athlete compensation, arguing that the NCAA's evidence falls "far short" of proving that its rules improve demand for college sports or help athletes integrate on campuses.
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October 26, 2018
NCAA Denied New Witness Proffer In Compensation Suit
A California federal judge has denied an "offer of proof" of new witness testimony from the NCAA after the close of a landmark antitrust bench trial over the organization's rules limiting athlete compensation, ruling that the issues in the offer go well beyond the NCAA's pretrial disclosures and the offer is untimely.
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October 19, 2018
NCAA Athletes Rip 'Myth' Of Amateurism In Trial Closings
NCAA athletes on Friday blasted the association's rules limiting athlete compensation in written closing arguments of a landmark antitrust trial, arguing that fans won't stop watching college sports if athletes are paid and amateurism is an "economically invalid" myth.
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October 02, 2018
NCAA Can't Introduce New Witness Proffer, Athletes Say
Student-athletes challenging the NCAA's rules limiting player compensation in a landmark antitrust bench trial have urged a California federal judge not to admit a new "offer of proof" about the burdens of upending those rules from a deposition witness who never testified.
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September 25, 2018
Athletics Commish Defends NCAA Pay Rules As Trial Wraps
The America East Conference commissioner defended the NCAA's rules limiting athlete compensation at the close of a landmark antitrust bench trial Tuesday, walking back public comments she made in February suggesting paying athletes could help level the playing field between schools with different resources.
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September 24, 2018
NCAA Athletes Say U. Of Wis. Contradicted Own Chancellor
Attorneys representing NCAA athletes in a landmark California antitrust trial on Monday sought another chance to question the University of Wisconsin-Madison's chancellor, who recently testified that it might drop its sports department if it had to start paying athletes, saying that testimony was contradicted by the school's recent statement.